Chats News August 5, 1967 Briefly Walkout avoided WINNIPEG (CP) — Rotating walkouts by 750 workers at the Boeing Fabrication and Services Co. of Canada plant in Winnipeg were avoided late Tuesday night after the company and union reached a last-minut contract “We've reached what we feel is an acceptable proposal and rather than recommend a strike we're going to recommend acceptance,” Bob White, the president of the Canadian Auto Workers Union, said early this morning. White refused to release details of the tentative deal which workers will vote on later this week. Patch on uniform CAPE CANAVERAL, FLA. (AP) — The uniforms of the crew of the next American space shuttle mission will include a patch in memory of the dead Ch , the National A i and Space Administration said Tuesday. ‘The pateh depicts the Big Dipper, a rising sun and a shuttle climbing on a plume of flame. NASA said the sunrise represents a new beginning and the seven stars in the Big Dipper astronauts killed in the Challenger explosion Jan. 28, 1986. The next shuttle mission is scheduled for June 2, 1988. Six die TOKYO (AP) — Lightning struck and killed six people surfing off Japan's southwestern coast Wednesday, police said. Six others were treated for injuries after the electrical storm. Most of the victims were high school students from Osaka. Wife impressed LONDON (AP) — An American construction manager who recently inherited the title of Earl of Wharneliffe says his new eminence hasn't changed his life, but“my wife is quite impressed, as she's a countess now.” Richard Wortley, 34, of Cumberland, Me., visited his ancestral home in Yorkshire this week. Wortley inherited the 161-year-old title in June. He was the closest living male relative of the fourth earl, who died without sons. Gandhi protest VANCOUVER (CP) — Indian Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi will face “peaceful demonstrations” when he attends the Commonwealth conference here in October, says the president of the Federation of Sikh Societies of Canada. Mohinder Singh Gosal, interviewed at the Ross Street Sikh temple where some 56 Asian refugee claimants are staying, said Tuesday the demonstra- tions planned by his group should not cause concern for Gandhi's safety. Merger approved WASHINGTON (REUTER) — The U.S. Federal Trade Commission cleared the way Tuesday for the proposed merger between Chrysler Corp. and American Motors Corp., a spokesman said. The spokesman said the commission voted to close its investigation of whether the merger would be in the public interest, thus allowing the merger to go ahead. The decision appeared to remove the last major obstacle to what would be the biggest merger in the U.S. auto industry since American Motors itself was created in 1954 from a merger from the Hudson and Nash motor companies. Not enough TORONTO (CP) — The Soviet Union allowed 819 Jews to emigrate in July, a figure that does not match what the Soviets have promised, says the Canadian Jewish Congress. So far this year, 3,924 Jews have left Russia, the congress said in a news release Tuesday. If the rate of fewer than 1,000 a month continues, the annual emigration of 10,000 to 12,000 that the congress said the Soviets have promised will not be reached. A group led by Montreal entrepfeneur Edgar Bronfman, president of the World Jewish Congress, visited Moscow in March and was told as many as 12,000 would be let out, the Canadian Jewish Congress said. At the time, newspaper reports gave the figure as 10,000. AIDS cost up BOSTON (AP) — The cost of AIDS-related deaths to U.S. life insurance companies could reach $50 billion US by the turn of the century, experts said Tuesday as they released the first major study of the disease’s effect on the industry The study said AIDS-related deaths could account for more than 20 per cent of the claims against some firms. Revolution eyed NEW YORK (AP) — The head of Nike Inc. said Tuesday the company plans to use the Beatles’ song Revolution in a new advertising campaign next month despite @ lawsuit that charges the company has used the recording without proper permission. “Any implication that we did anything improper or disrespectful to the Beatles or their music simply is not true, in our opinion, and we plan to vigorously defend ourselves in court,” Philip Knight. August 5, 1967 Casthépar News a3 TORONTO (CP) — After being thrown into the ocean on a foggy night, the only clue the 174 Asians had that they had finally landed safely in Canada was a Nova Scotia licence plate. In an exclusive interview Tuesday with the Toronto Globe and Mail, four of the East Indians gave the first public account of their harrowing 19-day. voyage to Canada in the cargo hold of a rusty freighter ship. They also discussed why they fled India and later the - -y of West and the Netherlands, what they hope to find in Canada, and the negative reception of Canadians at large. “We want Canadians to believe that we are not terrorists ... that we are refugees fleeing persecution in our homeland,” said one of the 174, who each paid $5,000 to get passage on the Amelie. “All we want is to live in peace,” a 23-year-old Sikh university student said Tuesday. “That is why we came to Canada. “We came to find the peace that we cannot have in India.” The four asked not to be identified for fear of reprisals against family members in India. CONNECTIONS One man who had been living in the Netherlands said he had heard of the ship through a friend. “We all heard through friends or connections,” he said, speaking through their interpreter, Monohar Singh Bal of the Internati Sikh Organization. “] don’t know who prganized it. It was not as if we all had a meeting together and decided to come to Canada in this manner.” For almost a week and under the cover of darkness, the Asians made their way one by one to the Amelie, which was docked near Rotterdam. They were taken to the cargo hold and told that they could not surface. Most paid for their trip through loans from friends, and others got money through connections with the All-India Sikh Student Federation. The men stressed the federation had nothing to do with organizing the trip. They said those who got money from the federation were sent because their lives were in danger. The men said they had to stay in the hold for the entire voyage. “It smelled awful. Many of us got very sick. We got only one meal a day of bread and rice. No tea, no coffee, just water.” Water from the ocean leaked into the hold making the floor on which they slept cold and damp. LOST WEIGHT On average, each passenger lost 12 to 15 pounds. One man said he lost 22 pounds because he was so sick. Once the Amelie reached the coast of Nova Scotia, they were hustled onto the deck on a dark, foggy night. A Licence plate gave clue canvas tarpaulin was tied to the bow of the ship and i the sea below. We ‘vere about two metres off the shore and two crew members started to throw us overboard on to the carpet and we slid down into the water,” one man said, “We were very scrared because we did not believe we were in Canada, We all held hands in the water in mud up to our knees and hips and waded to shore. The whole operation took no more than 15 minutes and then the ship way.” pre ma said they walked along the shore and then through a wooden are for almost four hours. ‘Then they saw a light on a roadway and began to walk along it until they met a man. It was near the Nova Scotian's home that one of the Asians, who had once lived in Canada before being ordered to leave, saw the markings on a licence plate and d eagerly to his exh d shi that they were, in fact, in Canada. Within minutes, police arrived and later in the day, the 174 boarded buses for the Canadian Forces base in Halifax. The men said they were treated very well at the base, but they have reservation: about their treatment by Immigration Department officials. “Tt was almost a week before we were told we could have a lawyer,” one of the four said. “We were never aware that we were entitled to one until that time.” FREE TRADE Support di By The Canadian Press Public support for a free trade agreement with the United States appears to be on the decline, suggests a new poll obtained Tuesday. fifty per cent of respondents said a free trade agreement is a “good idea” while 43 per cent said it is a “bad idea,” in a poll conducted in late May and early June for the government by Decima Research Ltd. A copy of the poll was obtained by the New Democratic Party under the Access to Information Act. Earlier polls conducted by other organizations in February and March suggested that 57 per cent of Canadians supported free trade while less than a third were opposed. Opposition to free trade is strongest in Prince Edward Island where 54 per cent of respondents were opposed, and in Ontario where 52 per cent were opposed. ps for deal unemployment with 37 per cent listin; important problem facing Canada today. Only six per cent listed the free-trade issue as the most important problem. Yet, even that proportion is high compared with concerns about other issues such as the highly publicized issue of the deficit, Decima noted. The national poll findings, based on 1,500 interviews, are considered accurate within 2.6 percentage points 95 times out of 100. Results by province are less accurate, ranging from 5.5 percentage points in Ontario to 10.3 percentage points in the smallest provinces. In other business news Tuesday: — Steleo Inc., Canada’s largest steelmaker, says it probably won't reopen its tornado-ravaged Edmonton plant for six to nine months, leaving about 350 workers out of work. it as the “most Support for free trade was strongest in where 64 per cent said it was a good idea and in British Columbia with 63 per cent favoring a deal. But the latest poll indicates most Canadians are not following the issue closely and even more admit they don't understand it as well as they could like. NOT UNDERSTOOD In the poll report, Decima said “while most Canadians say they do not understand the issue as well as they would like, they nevertheless believe it is important to them personally. “Most Canadians do not hold an accurate view of the importance of the United States to Canada’s export and import trade, with only one-quarter to one-third i The pany said the tornado inflicted serious damage to operations, electrical substations, cranes, service shops and other buildings. Stelco, the biggest employer hit by the tornado, said about 250 people — the balance of the workforce — will remain for cleanup and reconstruction. — Prime Minister Brian Mulroney announced a new $1.2-billion western diversification office that will help prepare the slumping Western Canadian economy to move into the next century. The $1.2-billion fund, spread over five years, will be invested in i and diversi! NO DOUBT ABOUT IT: SHAKED JERUSALEM (AP) — An Israeli prosecutor ended six days of heated cross-examination of John Demjanjuk today, saying “there is no way to avoid concluding” the former Ohio man operated the gas chambers at a Nazi death camp. “That's a lie... you want to trip me up,” Demjanjuk said, shaking a hand in thei air as his face reddened. Many of the more than 600 spectators murmured and laughed. Demjanjuk, 67, a retired auto worker from a suburb of Cleveland, is accused of being a notoriously brutal guard, known as Ivan the Terrible, at the Treblinka death camp in Nazi-occupied Poland. About 850,000 Jews were killed at the camp in 1942-43. The Ukrainian-born Demjanjuk, who claims he is a victim of mistaken identity, underwent gruelling cross- examination by prosecutors, often supported by the presiding judge, Dov Levine. Levine intervened today after Demjanjuk told presecutor Michael Shaked: “I know one of my problems is I don’t understand you, and you don’t understand me.” JUDICIAL REBUKE ‘The judge rebuked the defendant, saying, “You just don’t want to answer the question.” The msot dramatic exchange came as Shaked summed up his questioning and said: “After all the testimony has been heard against you, there is no way to programs. It will replace the Department of Regional and Industrial ion with a new Department of Industry, that Canada and the United States are each other's biggest trading partners.” Ecima noted that concern over U.S. protectionism and loss of control by Canadians over aspects of their economic or political sovereignty are evident in several statements. , by far more Canadi. are concerned about EDMONTON (CP) — A devastating tornado was moving off to the horizon when RCMP Const. George Koszegi jumped into his police car and raced to a shattered industrial area on Edmonton's eastern edge. Within minutes, Koszegi and other RCMP officers surveyed the trail of destruction left by Friday's tornado. “We had an idea that it was of major proportions from the outset,” Koszegi said in a telephone interview. The policemen radioed to their office to activate Strathcona Country's disaster plan and then began tending to the injured. That rapid response to the tornado that claimed 26 lives I] typified the handling of the disaster in Edmonton and Strathcona Country, an industrial, ‘residential and farming area on Edmonton's eastern boundary. Tornado survivors said in inte#views that the stormhad just passed and they were trying tewig themselves out when firemen and policemen arrived to'help them. Fire and police officials say their men reached damaged areas about five minutes after the tornado passed, despite fighting heavy rains, winds and debris-littered streets. Science and Technology. — Britain's biggest energy supply company has bought Bow Valley Industries Ltd. of Calgary in what was described as a vote of confidence in the Canadian energy industry. British Gas PLC will take over 51 per cent of Bow Valley in a $1.3-billion deal. Officer knew of danger Even though a tornado toppled electrical transmission towers and left a trail of broken natural gas lines, no one suffered electrical shock, power was not interrupted to much of the city and there were no explosions from leaking natural gas. Crews are continuing to work to repair the damage. There was heavy damage in several east Edmonton neighborhoods, but the rest of the city barely felt the impact of the storm, except for a few flooded basements and broken windows. “I think we did a first-class job,” Edmonton Mayor Laurence Decore told reporters when asked how the city's emergency services handled the disaster. Strathcona County Reeve Jim Common agreed. “I was extremely pleased with the way the response went,” Common said. “We couldn't have done a better job.” But Decore and city officials still want to review the handling of the disaster to look for weak points. WARNS PUBLIC One area Decore wants reviewed is the way the Environment Canada weather office forecasts a tornado and then warns the public. avoid I that you are in fact Ivan the Terrible from Treblinka.” “Have you an answer?” Judge Levine asked Demjanjuk. “Yes,” the defendant replied forcefully. The five survivors from Treblinka who have testified at the trial, he said, “never saw me until now in their lives. You said they called me Ivan the Terrible, that’s a lie.” Earlier, Demjanjuk’s daughter said her father is not getting a fair trial, and she accused the Israeli judges of having already decided he is guilty of war crimes. Lydia Maday, 37, left the courtroom in tears after Levine accused Demjanjuk of evading the truth about his actions during the Second World War. “The judges have already made their decision,” Maday, of Philadelphia, said. “There is no other way to interpret their behavior.” ‘SUSPICIOUS’ “It’s the manner in which the judges have been asking the questions and the tone of the questions that’s made us suspicious,” his daughter said. Maday recalled the day 10 years ago when she heard on a morning radio newscast that her father was suspected of war crimes. “All of a sudden your picture's in the paper, so you can’t even go into a store without everyone whispering: ‘That's the daughter of you-know-who,’ ” she said. TREET TALK THREE DISABLED athletes plan on competing as a team in the Nelson triathalon Aug. 9. Kris Stanbra and Joe Hall of Castlegar and Frank Cahill of Vancouver will work together as a team for the first time. Stanbra, an incomplete paraplegic, will swim 800 metres, across Kootenay lake and back, for the first leg of the triathalon. Hall, who is missing a leg, will bike 40 kilometres and Cahill, who is missing an arm, will run the final 10 kilometres. Stanbra said she has not been doing as much swimming as she should but she said she has already swam a practice swim of about three quarters of her 800 metres and found it wasn't difficult. “I figure I'm a strong enough swimmer and I think I can do it,” said Stanbra. “I just want to finish.” Stanbra, who received her spinal injuries in a car crash seven years ago, said it will be good to be back in competitive sports again. “It’s really neat to be part of that again.” YOUNG SAILORS in B.C. may have an opportunity to sail a newly constructed tall ship to Expo 88, in Brisbane, Australia. The Pacific Swift is the newest sail trainer being built by the SALTS, Sail and Life Training Society in Vietoria, and has been given official endorsement by the provincial government to fly the B.C. flag at the upcoming Expo. Young men and women, ages 17 to 25, can participate in one or more legs of the journey, between July 1988 and June 1989 with such ports-of-call as Hawaii, Samoa, New Zealand and Tahiti. SALTS is a non-profit organization and costs for the trainees will be kept to a minimum. Prerequisites to apply for the voyage are B.C. id » high school duation and good health. For more information contact the Sail and Life Training Society in Victoria. CHRISTINA LAKE residents have voted in favor of spending up to $15,000 a year to clean up the growing milfoil weed problem. Of the 308 people who voted in Saturday's referendum, 278 voted in favor and 30 voted against. VISITORS TO Moyie Lake Provincial Park near Cranbrook are finding the new beach facilities match the superb swimming. PACIFIC SWIFT . . ready to sail at EXPO 88 “Moyie Lake is already a popular recreation spot and these improvements make it more attractive than ever,” Environment and Parks Minister Bruce Si recently said in announcing completion of the $400,000 project. The new facilities include wash and changehouse with flush toilets, 40 picnic tables including some with sun-shelter roofs, a cartop boat launch and parking for 100 cars. For hot days, tables are also scattered along the Moyie River providing cool, secluded picnieking. One Hundred metres of sandy beach provide safe swimming in front of the entire development, and extensive grassy and landseapped areas complete the picture. IT SEEMS even the B.C. Legislature is talking about Rossland-Trail MLA Chris D'Arcy and his new baby. In the House last month, Brian Smith paid tribute to D'Arcy for his work in securing funds to reimburse City of Trail residents for property damage during May's disastrous downpour. Mark Rose, Coqui . lam-Moody MLA, on behalf of D'Arcy. “I know he has worked very hard on this,” said Rose. “It was probably made more difficult by the fact that he recently became a néw father; he has been up late a lot of nights and hasn't been able to get much sleep. “If he can do this when he’s only half awake,” he said, “just think what he could do if he was completely alert with his full capacities.” TRY SAVING ON FOOD BILLS 2 YOU'LL LIKE IT! 2 ... AT CENTRAL FOODS. ROAST $998 wa. 086 Aig. $657 Iu. STEA $319 BONELESS WHOLE. CANADA........ crave Aig. $73 /y,, PORK PICNICS, 214, 99° BEEF LIVER akg. *2°7/w. $1 a8 CHICKEN THIGHS ,..., $1 39 viseessesesecees ko Oe elt SeLn WERE RS 21, 91,70 SAUSAGE STICKS. $949 ere ROL. 55° — CENTRAL'S DELI DELITES — SALAMI -. 66° eo... 59° 66° | MEAT LOAF 100 G. BAVARIAN . WIENERS SCHNEIDERS. 9 KINDS . BACON CHEDDAR CHEESE MILD, MEDIUM OR OLD - HAVART. CHEESE $] 99 MAPLE LEAF. FROZEN. ..500 G, PKG. a neal $] 59 LINDSAY. MED., RIPE, PITTED. 398 mL TOMATO SAUCE QQ° KETCHUP 100 Ox. TIN $6*° TOMATO SAUCE 9 Q° es eeeeeees 7% OZ. TINS PICKLING SALT $4.59 | WINDSOR COURSE. ...........2kg. Knelman to speak in Nelson Vancouver scientist Dr. Fred Knelman will be back in Nelson Aug. 9 and 10 to lead two workshops during Chan- ging Our Ways of Thinking °87, a summer school which opens next Wednesday at David Thompson College. On Aug. 9, Dr. Knelman will address the topic of Canadian military policy, and Canada’s role in U.S. policy. The workshop will present the opportunities for peace, and the role of citizens wa- ging peace in various ways. The next day, “An Ecolo- gical Approach to Social and Technological, Development” ) will explore the nature, role, approrpiateness and devel- opment and technology. This session will incorporate the concepts of eco-regions, eco- development and sustainable societies. The format for both work- shops is a lecture followed by a discussion in small groups. Knelman brings with him a wealth of knowledge and ex- perience. He received his doctorate in Physics and En- gineering at the Imperial College of Science at the University of London, U.K. in 1953. He has a long teach ing career which includes professorships at McGill, York and Concordia univer- sities. He has written several books on the subjects of peace, environment and the social relations of science and technology, in addition to many articles, papers and studies. Knelman's activism in peace organizations spans four decades. He is presently Director of the Gamma Re- search in Intergrative Peace Studies at the Gamma In. stitute of Montreal. He has received many awards, in- cluding the World Federal- ists National Peace Essay Prize, the White Owl! Conser- vation Prize — Canada's outstanding environmenta- list — and the Special United Nations Association Award for outstanding contri- butions. He is a member of the Union of Concerned Scienti- sts and of the Canadian Coalition for Nuclear Respon. sibility. His lively, flamboyant speaking style endeared him to a Nelson audience last April during the conference on the Hanford nuclear res- ervation. WIDE MOUTH $429 OPEN SUNDAYS TO A.M. -5P.M. Prices Effective Thru Sunday. VINEGAR 4 w $268 CHEESE SLICES BLUE BONNET MARGARINE 3 wy $] 89 RIMINI PURE VEGETABLE OIL SALMON (CHALLENGER. 213 G. TIN MIRACLE WHIP 3.928 SUGAR 10.. *5°* COFFEE Canadians held in El Salvador TORONTO (CP) — The mother of an altar girl excluded from serving at a special Mass says she is dropping a complaint filed with the Ontario Human Rights Commission and will seek Vatican permission for Canadian women to serve at Mass. Suzanne Bernier said Tues: day she would ask Gerald Emmett Cardinal Carter — the archbishop of Toronto who barred her 11-year-old daughter from the Mass — to ask the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops to press the Vatican for the exception Bernier said she decided to drop her civil challenge, launched after Sandra was excluded from serving at the centennial Mass at Sacre Coeur Church in June, be cause she has found support from an expert on church law. Rev. Frank Morrisey, a professor of canon law at St. Paul University, Ottawa, en couraged her to work within the church for change and promised he would help. In addition to Bernier's appeal to Carter, Morrisey said he will ask the canon law commission of the conference of bishops to consider the issue. He serves as a consul- tant to the conference. If the Vatican rules the prohibition against women still in effect, Bernier and Morrisey wnat a specia exception for Canada. Carter was unavailable for comment Tuesday, but a spokesman for the arch diocese said he thought the Mother drops complaint cardinal would appreciate Bernier’s change of heart. “I think she’s doing the right thing working intern ally,” said the Rev. Brad Massman. “The cardinal has always been a leader when it comes to liturgical reform.” Weather Sunny skies with a risk of late afternoon showers or thunder tomorrow. Highs lows near 12° ity of precipitation is 10 per cent. weekend outlook is for sunny skies with seasonal temperatures near 30°. Tourist alert VANCOUVER (CP) — RCMP tourist alert for Wed. nesday. The following people believed to be travelling in British Columbia are asked to call the contact listed below: Frank Bumstead, Weyburn, Sask., call Ruth Witherow. Byron Hearn, Bow Island, Alta., call family. Linda Shea, Fort McMur ray, Alta., call Susie. Kenneth Swampy, Winni j peg. call Mary Thomas. Peter Wilson, Maple Bay he call Eileen Lionas. Raymond Wendlandt, Fair. bury, Neb., call Rita Beach ler. VANCOUVER (CP) — their rented truck was seized Five Canadians on a fact-find. ing tour of El Salvador were arrested and held in prison for 12 hours while their guards talked about the in. struments of torture at the prison, says a Vancouver teacher, Christine Hayes, 28, made the comment in an interview Tuesday evening shortly af ter arriving from El Salva. dor. With Hayes were fellow teachers Marlie Burton Roche, 50, of Calgary, Sheila Reid, 52, of Salt Spring Is land and Lorna Jamison, 38, ‘of Edmonton. A fifth com panion, Audrey Rosa, 31, re- mained in the Honduras. Hayes said the teacher. team landed in El Salvador July 22 to review the edu cation systsem and human rights abuses in the troubled Latin American country. A week later, when they went into a rural village without official permission, and they were put in a San Salvador jail. “Our passports were con fiscated, they confiscated our truck and they wouldn't let us call the embassy,” said Yayes She said their captors fidlally agreed to take Burton. Roche, suffering from sun stroke, to hospital where Hayes persuaded doctors to call the American Embassy — against the orders of the military Jamison said guards forced them to sign statements that they hadn't been tortured. “We weren't harmed,” she said. “But the soldiers kept talking about the torture equipment in the basement and how they had used it on others.” An American Embassy official managed to get them released, Hayes said. Exter nal Affairs officials in Ottawa were unavailable for com: ment =P RE S FAYE COX, Crofton, B.C. Congratulations to our two. Fabulous Companions Contest winners! They both be jetting to London and Hawaii with Skybridge Tours. Their prize package includes deluxe hotel accommodation and $1,00€ spending money. Kathy included a picture of two fabulous companions and TWO FABULOUS WINNERS! EN T S=== KATHY SZIKLAI, Vancouver, B.C earned herself $1,000 extra spending money! Everyone at Money's wishes a bon voyage to Faye and Kathy and the fabulous travelling com. panions of their choice Our thanks to NBC Studio Tours for pring tour of their new Sound and Special FIRST, THE MUSHROOMS $798 NABOB OR SUMMIT GROUND 369 G. PANCAKE SYRUP mi $ 1 28 PANEMKEMIK $99 COUPON $20 NAME DOG roop’*-30 8:.°7.29 $ 499 2.30 WITH THIS ar FO00S OMLY. LIMIT ONE BAG PER COUPON. Offer expires August 15, 1967 torr ene YOGOURT +2175 G. 2 for 99° CALIFORNIA STYLE .............. 1 PALM ICED TEA new GQ° PL At ¢ ROVER. REG. OR WITH VEGIES. 723 G. 69 ROVER. BES OR Wi EES Se DISPOSABLE DIAPERS saa OR LARGE 648 $17* FACIAL ¢ TISSUE FLORELLE. 200-2 PLY ICECREAM 4. $379 PALM. BIG DIPPER. PAPER TOWELS rronro. TOOTHPASTE FLAVORS. 100 ml & 50 mi BONUS BATHROOM TISSUE rovate CENTRAL FRESH PRODUCE CORN one COB: 10..99° APPLES CELERY STALKS PEACHES CTL: Md Ee EO © a Ec CO TOMATOES vrs... 99° PRICES EFFECTIVE THURSDAY, AUGUST 6 THROUGH SUNDAY, AUGUST 9, 1987 Central Foods YOUR COMMUNITY AWARD WINNING FOOD STORE 2717 COLUMBIA AVE.. CASTLEGAR BUSINESS HOURS Swop-+-Lasy FOODS Mon. Tues., Wed. & Sot Va.m. to 6 p.m. WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. Thurs. & Fri Va.m. to 9 p.m. SUNDA